Discover if your ancestor served time in an Irish gaol between 1790 and 1924. In the surviving records of prisons across Ireland you can find the stories of more than 3 million people. Was your ancestor a villainous rogue or a victim of circumstances? Search the Irish Prison Registers and find out.
Discover if your ancestor served time in an Irish gaol between 1790 and 1924. In the surviving records of prisons across Ireland you can find the stories of more than 3 million people. Was your ancestor a villainous rogue or a victim of circumstances? Search the Irish Prison Registers and find out.
Each record contains an image and a transcript of the original register. The information varies considerably depending on prison and date but you could find out the following about your ancestor:
Name
Address
Age
Place of birth
Occupation
Education
Religion
Physical description
Next of kin
Details of crime, including the name of the victim
Sentence
Dates of admission and release (or death)
Please note that since some prisons took in prisoners from the entire country, the county the prison is in may not be your ancestor’s home county.
In 1822 there were 178 prisons in Ireland. These records cover 3,127,598 prisoners who spent time there between 1790 and 1924.
In the 18th century Irish prisons were desperate places. Since punishments for crime were usually physical or capital, gaols were generally dumping grounds for the so-called unruly poor, those who had fallen into debt and those awaiting trial or transportation. Many gaols were effectively dungeons, privately-run dumping grounds for the manorial and debtors courts. Gaolers were frequently unpaid or poorly paid and many supplemented their incomes by demanding a fee before a prisoner could leave. Since many prisoners didn’t have a hope of paying, this practise led to chronic overcrowding.
Starvation was common among prisoners and many sought to escape the misery through cheap alcohol that was readily available – for a very reasonable price, often from a gaoler eager to supplement meagre earnings.
The drive to reform the prisons grew throughout the 18th century. In 1864 Cesare di Baccaria’s An Essay on Crimes and Punishment was published. It was published in Ireland three years later. The following decade prison reformer John Howard made his first trip to Ireland. He was not impressed. He noted that corruption was rife amongst the public institutions and many were “totally inattentive” Of the gaols, he said that he had never seen prisons or abuses worse than those in Ireland.
In 1786 the Regulation of Prisons Bill tried to address some of these problems. The bill established a prison inspector who would be appointed by the Grand Jury (similar to a county council today). Prisons should be inspected at least once every two years and budgets were to be agreed to feed the prisoners and maintain the prisons. Money was also allocated for the building of state bridewells across the country. The move partially worked. The drive for greater accountability also resulted in the registers that make up this record set. The Dublin Metropolitan Police was set up the same year and transportation to New South Wales was introduced.
Prisons finally came under state control in the Irish Prisons Act of 1826 with the setting up of the Prisons Board.
In the 19th century there were several types of prisons. Bridewells, as previously mentioned, were houses of correction and where those awaiting trial were put. These would have been the most common prison in Ireland. Debtors prisons and marshalseas were for those who could not pay their debts. These were more open than the criminal prisons to allow the debtors some chance of paying off their debts. Convict depots were where those awaiting transportation were sent. Prisons were for those convicted of criminal wrongdoing, frequently where they would serve out their sentences of hard labour. Many prisons and gaols served a variety of functions.
Many Irish prisons were built along the panopticon design of philosopher Jeremy Bentham. These buildings were built in a semi-circular design with cells off balconies on successive levels. This design can be seen in the newer part of Kilmainham Gaol in Dublin, familiar through its’ use in films and television programmes including The Italian Job, The Name of the Father, The Face of Fu Manchu, Michael Collins, Ripper Street, The Wind That Shakes the Barley and many others. The idea behind the design was to allow even a small number of gaolers to easily view the prison population.
Grangegorman women’s prison was built as a model prison centered around the idea of moral reform. Opened in 1836 it was the first ever exclusively female penitentiary in the British Isles. Prisoners were strictly segregated so that those awaiting trial or serving sentences for minor crimes were not corrupted by those convicted for major crimes or who had been convicted multiple times.
Convict depots were usually national, with prisoners from around the country. Kilmainham served as a depot, as did Grangegorman and, in the later 19th century, prisoners from around the country were sent to Spike Island in Cork to await a ship to take them to Van Dieman’s Land.
The most common crimes included theft, prostitution, drunk and disorderly behaviour and vagrancy. Many were convicted for using obscene language and there were high numbers convicted of seditious behaviour and rebellion at particularly volatile periods in Irish history, particularly between 1798 and 1803 and during the War for Independence when the country was under Marshal Law.
Sentences for hard labour were typically in weeks or months. Transportation sentences were generally for at least seven years, although shorter sentences were given.
The prison population peaked around the time of the Great Famine between 1845 and 1852 where many sought to get themselves arrested to escape from the harsh conditions. As prison food was often better than that available in the workhouses there were cases of workhouse inmates committing a crime to get sent to prison. In response, prison rations were cut to be more in line with the workhouses.
Despite the reforms throughout the 19th century it wasn’t until the 1860s that many took hold. Although exit fees were gradually stamped out right up until the 1850s those with the money could considerably ease their time in prison by paying off the gaolers in exchange for certain privileges including food being brought in from outside, and even conjugal visits.
County Clare
Ennis Refomatory
County Cork
Bandon (Bridewell)
Charleville (Bridewell)
Clonakilty
Cork
Dunmanway (Bridewell)
Fermoy (Bridewell)
Fort Carlisle
Kanturk (Bridewell)
KInsale (Bridewell)
Millstreet (Bridewell)
Mitchelstown (Bridewell)
Queenstown (Bridewell)
Skibereen (Bridewell)
Spike Island Prison
Youghal (Bridewell)
Dublin County and City
Grangegorman Female Prison
Kilmainham
Mountjoy
Newgate
Richmond (Bridewell)
Smithfield
County Galway
Galway
Loughrea (Bridewell)
County Kerry
Tralee
County Kildare
Athy
Naas
County Kilkenny
Kilkenny
County Laois
Maryborough
Queen’s County
County Leitrim
Carrick-on-Shannon
County Limerick
Limerick
County Longford
Longford
County Louth
Dundalk
County Mayo
Castlebar
County Meath
Trim
County Offaly
Tullamore
County Sligo
Sligo
County Tipperary
Clonmell
Nenagh
County Waterford
Waterford
County Wexford
New Ross (Bridewell)
Wexford
County Wicklow
Wicklow
The images were provided by Family Search from records held at the National Archives of Ireland. Indexing was carried out by IIM Inc.
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Images provided by and copyright © familysearch.org. Images derived from National Archives of Ireland Prison Register records.